Jay O'Callahan is a prominent American storyteller for people of all ages. He has performed at numerous national and international storytelling festivals, in theaters worldwide, and on the radio. He performs almost exclusively material of his own authorship. He has recorded many of his oral stories and has written picture books based on several of his tales. O'Callahan is best known for his large-scale oral stories that present the texture of a culture and a time in history through the perceptions of a central narrative character.
O'Callahan's storytelling style is generally quiet and understated. His performances do not use props, sets, costumes, dramatic movement or instrumental music. He has a spellbinding ability to embody through the cadence of words his central characters (young and old, male and female), evoking soundscapes of seemingly ordinary life, with something epic and magical flickering just around the edges.
They didn't have any money, they were teachers. But nobody wanted those big old houses because nobody wanted to heat them. So my parents bought it and didn't heat it."His childhood neighbors, parents, and other relatives figure prominently in many of his stories.
After unsuccessful attempts at law school and as a novelist, O'Callahan found his voice as a professional storyteller in the 1970s, one of the early proponents of what has been called the American Storytelling Renaissance. He came to national prominence in 1980 with his first appearance at the National Storytelling Festival. In 1996 he was inducted into the Circle of Excellence by the National Storytelling Association (now National Storytelling Network). Jay and his wife Linda are the parents of two children, Ted and Laura. They live in Marshfield, Massachusetts.
, Jonesborough, Tennessee 1980, 1987, 2000, 2002, 2004, and 2007 O'Callahan has performed and recorded with John Langstaff and appeared several times in the character role of an ethnic storyteller in the Christmas Revels.
The fictional kingdom of Artana is the setting for several of O'Callahan's tales of childhood adventure and heroism in a magical world set somewhere between Narnia and the island of Shakespeare's The Tempest.
O'Callahan's major breakthrough as an adult storyteller was "The Herring Shed", which depicts the World War II homefront through the perceptions of a young woman working at a fish packing plant in the Canadian Maritimes. Using the verbal singsong rhythm of the work of stringing herring on rods for the smokehouse, the story creates a momentum of a girl finding her social place and sense of self-esteem in this small monotonous work shed, seemly utterly remote from a world at war. But their work is for the war, a war that periodically intrudes in the form of telegrams announcing deaths of relations at the front.
Among O'Callahan's most often requested stories are an onging series known as the Pill Hill stories. These are somewhat fictionalized tales of O'Callahan's Irish-Catholic childhood in 1950s Boston, and of his uncle's and aunt's experiences during World War II and its aftermath. Frequently humorous and with a sense of magic and absurdity, these tales are told through the eyes of a young boy, and are tightly focused on the emotional lives of the characters. They nevertheless deal in this microcosm with larger historical and cultural issues including class and ethnic prejudice, politics, the effects of alcohol abuse on family members, the plight of Japanese-Americans during and after World War II, and the complex nature of heroism.
O'Callahan has created other long-form adult stories from factual material, always from the intimate point of view of a central narrative character, and imbued with a sense of the mythic. These include "The Spirit of the Great Auk" a tale of Dick Wheeler's real-life epic kayak trip along the eastern coast of Canada and New England, following the migratory route of the extinct Great Auk, and encountering its ghostly spirit; "Pouring the Sun", commissioned by Bethlehem, Pennsylvania to commemorate the city's steel-making history; and "Father Joe: A Hero's Journey" the story of a U.S. Navy chaplin Joseph T. O'Callahan who saved the USS Franklin (CV-13) after it was set ablaze by Japanese aircraft during World War II.
Three of the Pill Hill stories, "Pouring the Sun", "Herman and Marguerite", and "Six Stories about Little Heroes" are available on DVD or video.The Pill Hill stories (in order of publication) are "Chickie", "Glasses", "Politics", "The Dance", "Electra", "Muddy River High", "Equations", "A Good Night's Rest", "Muddy River Playhouse", "Books and Burglars", "Report Card", and "The Labyrinth of Uncle Mark". "Father Joe: A Hero's Journey" is arguably a Pill Hill story, as its principal characters include a youthful college-age Jay O'Callahan and his uncle, Father Joe. However, much of this story is not from the point of view of Oak, O'Callahan's autobiographical character, and none of this story occurs in or references the Pill Hill neighborhood.
Three of O'Callahan's oral stories have been published as illustrated children's books:
Stories by O'Callahan are published the following anthologies:
A Master Class on Storytelling is available on videotape from O'Callahan's website